Present Uncertainty and Looking to the Past: The Ambiguous Literary Nationalism of Putnam’s Monthly

Putnam’s Monthly (1853-1857) was one of the best literary and general interest magazines in antebellum America. Besides its high quality, what made the New York-based magazine stand out was its commitment to publishing American writers and focusing on American themes at a time when, with no reliable...

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Main Author: Mark NIEMEYER
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Laboratoire d’Etudes et de Recherches sur le Monde Anglophone (LERMA) 2023-06-01
Series:E-REA
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Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/erea/16299
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author Mark NIEMEYER
author_facet Mark NIEMEYER
author_sort Mark NIEMEYER
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description Putnam’s Monthly (1853-1857) was one of the best literary and general interest magazines in antebellum America. Besides its high quality, what made the New York-based magazine stand out was its commitment to publishing American writers and focusing on American themes at a time when, with no reliable international copyright protection in place, many periodicals in the United States were in the habit of reprinting the works of foreign (primarily British) authors, sometimes without payment. However, despite its optimistic literary nationalism, Putnam’s Monthly expressed uncertainty about the quality of contemporary American literature and, indeed, about the capacity of American society to encourage cultural pursuits. And when the magazine looked towards the nation’s past—an important theme for literary nationalists—there, too, its view of the United States seemed uncertain. And the magazine also made an almost desperate attempt to paint a positive picture of the nation’s literary situation in part by exploiting a certain vagueness created by the evolving definition of the term “literature.” This article explores some of the ambiguities created by the tension between the editorial policy of literary nationalism adopted by Putnam’s Monthly and the uncertainties expressed in its pages about the state of American letters.
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spelling doaj-art-99e43683bdd34456bb8c27959aa57b8f2025-01-09T12:53:06ZengLaboratoire d’Etudes et de Recherches sur le Monde Anglophone (LERMA)E-REA1638-17182023-06-0120210.4000/erea.16299Present Uncertainty and Looking to the Past: The Ambiguous Literary Nationalism of Putnam’s MonthlyMark NIEMEYERPutnam’s Monthly (1853-1857) was one of the best literary and general interest magazines in antebellum America. Besides its high quality, what made the New York-based magazine stand out was its commitment to publishing American writers and focusing on American themes at a time when, with no reliable international copyright protection in place, many periodicals in the United States were in the habit of reprinting the works of foreign (primarily British) authors, sometimes without payment. However, despite its optimistic literary nationalism, Putnam’s Monthly expressed uncertainty about the quality of contemporary American literature and, indeed, about the capacity of American society to encourage cultural pursuits. And when the magazine looked towards the nation’s past—an important theme for literary nationalists—there, too, its view of the United States seemed uncertain. And the magazine also made an almost desperate attempt to paint a positive picture of the nation’s literary situation in part by exploiting a certain vagueness created by the evolving definition of the term “literature.” This article explores some of the ambiguities created by the tension between the editorial policy of literary nationalism adopted by Putnam’s Monthly and the uncertainties expressed in its pages about the state of American letters.https://journals.openedition.org/erea/16299historyPutnam’s Monthlyliterary nationalismGeorge Palmer PutnamAmerican antebellum magazinesinternational copyright protection
spellingShingle Mark NIEMEYER
Present Uncertainty and Looking to the Past: The Ambiguous Literary Nationalism of Putnam’s Monthly
E-REA
history
Putnam’s Monthly
literary nationalism
George Palmer Putnam
American antebellum magazines
international copyright protection
title Present Uncertainty and Looking to the Past: The Ambiguous Literary Nationalism of Putnam’s Monthly
title_full Present Uncertainty and Looking to the Past: The Ambiguous Literary Nationalism of Putnam’s Monthly
title_fullStr Present Uncertainty and Looking to the Past: The Ambiguous Literary Nationalism of Putnam’s Monthly
title_full_unstemmed Present Uncertainty and Looking to the Past: The Ambiguous Literary Nationalism of Putnam’s Monthly
title_short Present Uncertainty and Looking to the Past: The Ambiguous Literary Nationalism of Putnam’s Monthly
title_sort present uncertainty and looking to the past the ambiguous literary nationalism of putnam s monthly
topic history
Putnam’s Monthly
literary nationalism
George Palmer Putnam
American antebellum magazines
international copyright protection
url https://journals.openedition.org/erea/16299
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